Download the app
← Latest news

Richard Socher’s Recursive Superintelligence aims for AI that fixes itself and ships real products

Technology
Published on 14 May 2026
Richard Socher’s Recursive Superintelligence aims for AI that fixes itself and ships real products

Its self-improvement loop runs without human involvement

Richard Socher’s new startup, Recursive Superintelligence, has raised $650 million and says it’s building a recursively self-improving AI that can diagnose its own weaknesses, redesign itself, and validate the changes automatically. Socher argues this is more than “AI auto-research”: the full cycle of ideation, implementation, and validation would be automated, starting in AI research and eventually extending to physical tasks. The team is drawing on open-endedness and multi-agent “rainbow teaming” safety methods from deep research labs.

  • Recursive Superintelligence launched in stealth with $650 million funding
  • The goal is fully automated ideation, implementation, and validation
  • The AI should identify weaknesses and redesign itself with no human help
  • Open-endedness is central, drawing inspiration from DeepMind’s world-model work
  • The team includes Peter Norvig and Cresta cofounder Tim Shi
  • Socher says the effort is a practical product plan, not a research-only lab
Read the full story at TechCrunch

This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on TechCrunchTechCrunch

The full experience is on mobile.

Swipe through stories, personalise your feed, and save articles for later — all on the app.